Taiwan demands apology from WHO chief over
coronavirus 'slander'
April 9, 2020
TAIPEI, Taiwan — Taiwan demanded an apology from the
World Health Organization chief on Thursday after he accused the island's
government of leading personal attacks against him and his agency's response to
the coronavirus pandemic.
WHO director-general Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus called for
unity to fight the disease on Wednesday after US President Donald Trump
criticised the global health body and threatened to cut its funding.
During the press conference he spoke of the abuse -- including
racial slurs -- he had been subjected to since the public health crisis began.
Tedros largely avoided mentioning Trump by name but he did
single out the government in Taipei, which has been frozen out of the WHO after
political pressure from Beijing.
"Three months ago, this attack came from Taiwan,"
he told reporters in Geneva, referring to online criticism and insults.
"Taiwan, the Foreign Ministry also, they know the campaign.
They didn't disassociate themselves. They even started criticising me in the
middle of all that insult and slur, but I didn't care," Tedros said.
The comments sparked anger in Taiwan, which described
Tedros' comments as "baseless".
"Our country has never encouraged the public to launch
personal attacks against him or made any racially discriminatory
comments," foreign ministry spokeswoman Joanne Ou told reporters on
Thursday.
The ministry added it was seeking an apology for
"slander".
In a Facebook post, President Tsai Ing-wen invited Tedros to
visit Taiwan and learn from its handling of the epidemic, challenging
him to "resist pressure from China".
"We have been blocked from international organisations for
many long years and we know what it feels like to be discriminated against and
isolated more than anyone else," she said.
Worsening relations
Relations between the WHO and Taiwan have worsened
considerably since the pandemic began, even as health experts have
lauded Taiwan for its response to the virus.
It has just 380 confirmed COVID-19 patients and five deaths
despite its close proximity and trade links with China, where the pandemic
began.
Taiwan used to be able to obtain observer status at the
WHO's annual assembly.
But diplomatic pressure from Beijing in recent years has
pushed Taiwan out of major international bodies including the WHO and
ICAO -- the UN's aviation agency.
China's Communist Party regards Taiwan as a breakaway
province and has vowed to one day seize the island -- by force if necessary.
Beijing's efforts to isolate the island have ramped up since the
election of President Tsai Ing-wen in 2016 because does not view the island as
part of a "one China".
Critics of Tedros have accused the WHO under his leadership of
being too close to Beijing and complimentary of China's response to the
coronavirus.
In a tweet threatening to cut funding, Trump called the
organisation "very China centric".
Tedros has denied being partisan or holding any geopolitical
bias.
"Please quarantine COVID politics. That's what we want. We
don't care about personal attacks," he said.
.
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